Hair Transplant

Hair loss and Hair fall are two separate things.
Hair fall is a natural daily occurrence. Human head
contains over 100,000 hairs and one normally
sheds 100 to 150 hairs a day, every hair is
genetically programmed. In general 85% of the
hair on your head grow approximately one
centimeter per month for about 2 to 6 years
and then fall off. Hair loss is primarily caused
by a combination of ageing, a change in
hormones and a family history (genetic) of
baldness. As a rule, the earlier hair loss begins,
the more severe the baldness will become. .
Hair loss can also be caused by burns or trauma,
in which case hair replacement is considered a restoration treatment. However, hairs on back of your head are genetically programmed and scheduled to last long.

The incidence of male pattern baldness increases 10 percent per decade through a man's life. The causes of female loss range often from iron deficiency to thyroid abnormalities to childbirth. For both sexes, hair loss causes diminished self-esteem, stress, anxiety, depression and feelings of social inadequacy.

Baldness is often blamed on poor circulation to the scalp, vitamin deficiencies, dandruff excessive hat-wearing. All of these theories have been disproved. If hair is a symbol of a person's youth, the loss of it can act as a reminder of approaching old age for men entering their forties.

Female Pattern Hair Loss

The most common type of hair loss seen in women is androgenic alopecia, also known as female pattern alopecia or baldness. This is seen as hair thinning predominantly over the top and sides of the head. It affects approximately one-third of all susceptible women, but is most commonly seen after menopause, although it may begin as early as puberty. Normal hair fall is approximately 100-120 hairs per day. Fortunately, these hairs are replaced. True hairs loss occurs when lost hairs are not re-grown or when the daily hair shed exceeds 125 hairs. Genetically, hair loss can come from either parent's side of the family.

Hair Transplantation

In hair restoration (transplantation), it's this non-miniaturized hair on the back and sides that is surgically moved to the top of the head in the form of a tiny skin graft. Because the hair on the permanent horseshoe is genetically programmed to grow a lifetime, it will continue to grow even though it's been transplanted to a different site. This is medical fact, and has been repeatedly proven for more than thirty five years.

For some patients, a hairline may need recreation; for others, more extensive hair replacement maybe required. A few patients may want to correct sparse eyebrows or a scar on the scalp. All these individuals, both men and women, are good candidates for the transplant procedure.

How is the procedure performed?

Under local anesthesia, the donor hair grafts are harvested from a strip of skin taken from area between two ears. The strip is divided into small units of skin (grafts), each containing one to three hairs - the follicular units. Then recipient sites are created in the area of hair loss by making small slits in the bald skin. Each site is no bigger than the opening created by the needle used when blood is drawn from your arm. Then each of the grafts is carefully placed into each recipient site. The donor site in the back of the head is not visible. Three to four months later, the transplanted hair begins to grow and continues to grow a half inch per month for the rest of your life.

Why do some Hair Transplants look "more natural" than others?

Although hair transplantation has been performed for almost 35 years, it's never become as popular as you might expect. With good reason it sometimes looks conspicuous and unnatural! One reason is that old fashioned grafts were simply too big. They contained 10 to 20 hairs, and when they grew, tufted doll's head resulted However, if the grafts are made very, very small, with only one follicular unit per graft, the density of the hair can be more evenly distributed and exactly approximate nature's way. This is the basic principle that's used in what's commonly called follicular unit grafting.

What's the difference between a micrograft and a follicular unit graft?

Micro and Follicular unit grafts are often confused. Micrografts are simply grafts which contain either one or two hairs. They are cut randomly from the donor strip with no attention paid to the follicular unit groupings. Follicular unit grafts are actual isolated follicular units that naturally grew in groupings of one, two, or three hairs. In other words, one three haired follicular unit graft could be divided into 3 one haired micrografts.

How is the perfect frontal hairline created?

We use only single grafts in the front hairline, often 100 to 200 of them. Single hair follicular unit grafts are placed in the front rows, and behind them two hair grafts, and behind them the three haired grafts - thus attempting to duplicate the subtle feathered look of a natural thinning hairline. The grafts are delicately handled, refrigerated and submerged in nutrient solution throughout the entire process.

How much pain should I expect? Are there any complications?

Essentially none. Most patients describe the session as easier than a visit to the dentist. Complications rarely occur, but occasionally numbness in the donor site may persist for two or three months after the procedure.

What happens after hair transplant surgery?

Patient can resume light work from third day onwards.
Sutures on back of head are removed after 7 days.
However patient should not do any exercise fro three
weeks or shun any activity which will increase pressure
in transplanted area. Mild swelling on forehead is possible
which disappears after day or two.

You can have head bath 4th day onwards.
Crusts, scabs and effluvium fall off in next 4 weeks. No special
care, medicines or frequent visits to doctor are required.

The hairs will fall out of the newly transplanted follicles
within two to six weeks after the procedure - this is normal!